The wall of the bladder wall has three principal tissue layers or coats:
- mucosa
- submucosa
- muscularis

Mucous membrane (mucosa)--transitional epithelium; lines the bladder, ureters, and urethra
Epithelial layer--contains no blood vessels or lymphatic
Basement membrane--lies beneath epithelial layer; single layer of cells separating the epithelial layer from the lamina propria; a sheet of extracellular material serving as a filtration barrier and supporting structure for the mucosal layer
Submucous coat (lamina propria)--areolar connective tissue; interlaced with the muscular coat. This layer contains blood vessels, nerves, and in some regions, glands. A tumor which has spread to this layer can metastasize to the rest of the body via the lymphatics and blood vessels.
Muscular coat (muscularis propria)--three layers: inner longitudinal, middle circular, and outer longitudinal
Serous coat (serosa)--a reflection of the peritoneum which covers only the superior surface and the upper part of the lateral surfaces
Adventitia--in areas on bladder where there is no serosa, the connective tissue between organs merges
Perivesical fat--layer of fat surrounding bladder outside of serosa/adventitia
epithelium
urothelium
mucosal surface
transitional mucosa
muscularis
muscularis propria
muscularis externa
smooth muscle
lamina propria
suburothelial connective tissue
subepithelial tissue
stroma
muscularis mucosa
adventitia
serosa
The most common sites for bladder tumors are the posterior and lateral walls. The superior wall is less frequently involved.
Regional diathesis, field defect--terms which mean a tendency for the lining of the urinary tract to develop multiple tumors; a generalized deterioration of the urothelium from the renal pelvis into the urethra showing premalignant changes